Manfred Belheim
Moaner Lisa
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2009
- Messages
- 8,659
Not according to their moral code, no.
First of all, the second sentence does not make any sense, because I'm not sure what "your individuality as defined by existence" is supposed to mean. But even putting that aside... you say animal rights come from "society" but human rights come from "existence"... Why? What is it about humans especially that they get to have their rights come from "existence" rather than "society" as with the other animals? Why don't animal rights come from "existence" too?Human (natural) rights dont come from society, civil rights do. Your right to life didn't come from me or society, it came from your individuality as defined by existence.
This is just factually incorrect. It is pretty standard practice to euthanize a dog or lion or any zoo or domestic animal that attacks and maims and/or kills a human.When I said people have no moral claims against animals I meant it isn't immoral for animals to kill us. I cannot accuse the lion chewing on my leg of violating my right to live.
That's just another way of saying that "morality and rights" come from "society".Morality and rights involve human interaction.
It was more like a critique of the whole idea that human life is somehow special or sacred, which is exactly the argument you are making here when you say the human rights to life and self-defense come from "existence", but animal rights don't. And his conclusion... that this/your position is all just made up self-serving BS by humans, is what I am suggesting in response.That was his rebuttal to the pro-life label used by people opposed to abortion.
No. This does not follow for numerous reasons. First of all, you've dubbed the right to life and self defense as "natural" rights which exist superior to any laws and come from "existence" rather than the laws/rules/consensus of "society". So if they exist independent of law/society how can they be stripped by society? The only way a right could be legally/morally destroyed by society is if it was created by society in the first place.Did Jews lined up at the gas chambers have the right to escape, even when that required killing guards? Yes... Does that hold true for a murderer being executed? No, they stripped away their victim's right to life. When society executes the murderer they do so partly on behalf of the victim, their moral authority to kill the would-be murderer in self defense transfers to society in the form of after-the-fact punishment.
OK, but what if it was "universal"? What if we were living in some kind of environment, like a post apocalyptic world, for example, where food sources were so limited, that cannibalism was common, widespread practice? Would it then become a "natural" right? If yes, then that wouldn't that seem to suggest that "natural" rights are actually quite flexible and circumstance-dependent, rather than hard-and-fast principles that have higher moral authority than law. On the other hand, if not, then "universality" can't be the basis of something being a natural right can it?If killing to eat is universal, then it might identify a right for people to do the same. It just isn't universal for people to do that to each other.
Also, just note that we've gone as far down this path to actually start suggesting that there might be a natural right for people to kill-and-eat each other.![]()
Tough luck for the cows tho, eh?Backwards sommer. We're far enough down our path that that particular location seems remote and far away. Go us!![]()
Especially when you consider we don't give nearly enough moral gravity to plants. Not rights in any meaningful sense, that's ridiculous, but in their intrinsic value. We probably give, if anything, a bit too much to companion animals.
Tough luck for the cows tho, eh?
I think it's morally consistent.
So we need more companion plants?Especially when you consider we don't give nearly enough moral gravity to plants. Not rights in any meaningful sense, that's ridiculous, but in their intrinsic value. We probably give, if anything, a bit too much to companion animals.
El, I'm still more worried about setaside and conservation(which you phrase with the lingo of the day as biodiversity) than I am the chickens. The lab grown meat is a red herring too. Massive disease risk once the immune systems are rendered artificial and the individual, isolatable, cullable, bulwarks are eliminated.
No. It isn't consistent. Self defense hinges on the imminence of the threat. Otherwise, if the right survives the imminence, then you'd have a right to go hunt down and kill the guy who "threatened" you with a gun a week prior, out of "self defense".We execute people with the death penalty as a variant of self-defense. I think it's morally consistent.